scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Substring-Searchable Symmetric Encryption

Melissa Chase, +1 more
- Vol. 2015, Iss: 2, pp 263-281
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
It is proved security of the substring-searchable encryption scheme against malicious adversaries, where the query protocol leaks limited information about memory access patterns through the suffix tree of the encrypted string.
Abstract
In this paper, we consider a setting where a client wants to outsource storage of a large amount of private data and then perform substring search queries on the data – given a data string s and a search string p, find all occurrences of p as a substring of s. First, we formalize an encryption paradigm that we call queryable encryption, which generalizes searchable symmetric encryption (SSE) and structured encryption. Then, we construct a queryable encryption scheme for substring queries. Our construction uses suffix trees and achieves asymptotic efficiency comparable to that of unencrypted suffix trees. Encryption of a string of length n takes O(λn) time and produces a ciphertext of size O(λn), and querying for a substring of length m that occurs k times takes O(λm + k) time and three rounds of communication. Our security definition guarantees correctness of query results and privacy of data and queries against a malicious adversary. Following the line of work started by Curtmola et al. (ACM CCS 2006), in order to construct more efficient schemes we allow the query protocol to leak some limited information that is captured precisely in the definition. We prove security of our substring-searchable encryption scheme against malicious adversaries, where the query protocol leaks limited information about memory access patterns through the suffix tree of the encrypted string.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Searchable Symmetric Encryption: Designs and Challenges

TL;DR: This work seeks to address the gap in detail how SSE’s underlying structures are designed and how these result in the many properties of a SSE scheme, as well as presenting recent state-of-the-art advances on SSE.
Posted Content

SoK: Cryptographically Protected Database Search

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify the important primitive operations across database paradigms and evaluate the current state of protected search systems in implementing these base operations, and present a roadmap and tools for transforming a protected search system into a protected database.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

SoK: Cryptographically Protected Database Search

TL;DR: An evaluation of the current state of protected search systems and describes the main approaches and tradeoffs for each base operation, which puts protected search in the context of unprotected search, identifying key gaps in functionality.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Privacy-preserving pattern matching over encrypted genetic data in cloud computing

TL;DR: This paper starts from a practical system model of the personalize medicine and presents a solution for the secure DNA sequence matching problem in cloud computing and proves that the scheme is secure under the well-defined cryptographic assumption, i.e., the sub-group decision assumption over a bilinear group.
Journal ArticleDOI

Practical-oriented protocols for privacy-preserving outsourced big data analysis: Challenges and future research directions

TL;DR: This paper surveys the state-of-the-art literature on cryptographic solutions designed to ensure the security and/or privacy in big data outsourcing and provides concrete examples to explain how these cryptographic solutions can be deployed.
References
More filters
Book ChapterDOI

5PM: secure pattern matching

TL;DR: The techniques reduction pattern matching and generalized Hamming distance problem to a novel linear algebra formulation that allows for generic solutions based on any additively homomorphic encryption are believed to be of independent interest.
Journal ArticleDOI

5PM: Secure pattern matching

TL;DR: The problem of secure pattern matching that allows single-character wildcards and substring matching in the malicious stand-alone setting is considered and the first secure expressive pattern matching protocol designed to optimize round complexity by carefully specifying the entire protocol round by round is considered.
Posted Content

A New Approach to Practical Active-Secure Two-Party Computation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a new approach to practical two-party computation secure against an active adversary using an OT-based approach and get efficiency via OT extension in the random oracle model.
Posted Content

Signature Schemes Secure against Hard-to-Invert Leakage.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a digital signature scheme that is secure against chosen message attacks when given any exponentially hard-to-invert function of the secret key, and showed that such signature schemes readily give us auxiliary input secure identification schemes.
Related Papers (5)